{"id":15023,"date":"2021-06-22T16:01:25","date_gmt":"2021-06-22T20:01:25","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/?p=15023"},"modified":"2021-06-22T16:01:25","modified_gmt":"2021-06-22T20:01:25","slug":"johnston-on-tomsic","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/2021\/06\/22\/johnston-on-tomsic\/","title":{"rendered":"Johnston on Tom\u0161i\u010d"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Johnston, A. (2017). From Closed Need to Infinite Greed: Marx\u2019s Drive Theory. <em><a rel=\"noreferrer noopener\" href=\"https:\/\/ir.canterbury.ac.nz\/bitstream\/handle\/10092\/14494\/13%20Johnston%20Capital.pdf?sequence=1&amp;isAllowed=y\" target=\"_blank\">Continental Thought and Theory<\/a><\/em>, 1(4), 270-346. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The capitalist drive for self-valorization is an unsatisfiable demand, to which no labour can live up to.&#8221; Johnston quoting Tom\u0161i\u010d.  Johnston like much of what Tom\u0161i\u010d says. However he finds that Tom\u0161i\u010d is not sufficiently sensitive to what Johnston points out are the specificities of capitalism.  Stating:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Simply and bluntly put, the Lacanian drive-desire distinction is not, for Lacan himself, peculiar to properly capitalist socio-economic systems &#8230;  whereas the Marxian greed-mania distinction is (as I show throughout the preceding) (318).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And Johnston disagrees with Tom\u0161i\u010d&#8217;s de-historicizing tendencies. Johnston believed libidinal drive pre-dates capitalism, nevertheless with the advent of capitalism, it ramped up this drive. Here&#8217;s Johnston&#8217;s point:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Immediately identifying, as Tom\u0161i\u010d appears to do, manic consumerism with Lacan\u2019s d\u00e9sir dehistoricizes the former, tearing it out of its capitalist context by decoupling it from its dependence upon and connection with the specifically capitalist drive (i.e., abstract-qua-quantitative hedonism as the circuit M-C-M\u2032). Likewise,<span style=\"color:#a30004\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> greed<\/span> <em>als Mehrwertstrieb<\/em> <span style=\"color:#a30004\" class=\"has-inline-color\">comes into effective existence and operation only in and through capitalism.<\/span>  <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>and further Johnston goes on:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As a Lacanian, I would say that the metapsychology of <strong>the libidinal economy transcends and is irreducible to merely one or several historical contexts<\/strong>, with capitalism (as one of these contexts) at most generating differences-in-degree between pre-capitalist and capitalist libidinal economics. But, as a Marxist, I would say that these differences-in-degree generated by capitalism are so broad and deep as to be tantamount <strong>de facto<\/strong> to differences-in-kind.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<!--more-->\n\n\n\n<p>Here is Johnston&#8217;s major disagreement with Tom\u0161i\u010d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Johnston claims that Tom\u0161i\u010d portrays Freud, &#8220;through Freud\u2019s self-avowed wounding of humanity\u2019s narcissism, as carrying forward from the natural to the human sciences<strong> the anti-narcissistic implications of modernity\u2019s valorization of an anonymous, impersonal, trans-individual reason.&#8221; <\/strong>And further, &#8220;Tom\u0161i\u010d, in line with Milner, contends that the core of the scientific <em>Weltanschauung <\/em>in which Freudian analysis proudly participates <strong>consists of an anti-humanist rationality corrosive to human narcissism<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Therefore according to Tom\u0161i\u010d, &#8220;For both Marx and Lacan, the negative, which\u2026 means the non-narcissistic subject, is the necessary singular point on which political universalism should build\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Johnston&#8217;s conclusion <\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>Nonetheless, I have some significant reservations and objections to raise in response to these reflections. To begin with, capitalism\u2019s social relations of servitude, domination, exploitation, oppression, etc. ultimately arise from and remain fueled by capitalism-specific greed (i.e., <em>der Trieb des Kapitals, der Mehrwertstrieb as auri sacra fames, die Bereicherungssucht, <\/em>and\/or<em> die Goldgier <\/em>[M-C-M\u2032]). Therefore, however much social relations within capitalism appear to reproduce ancient and\/or medieval inequalities and hierarchies, this really is an appearance emerging from modern rather than pre-modern social structures, a matter of superficial resemblances belying structural differences-in-kind between incommensurable social orders.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Furthermore, Tom\u0161i\u010d, as seen, equates \u201cnarcissism\u201d with the selfishness central to the self-conception of classic (Smithian) liberalism and its offspring. He speaks in this vein of \u201cself-love and self-interest.\u201d Likewise, Tom\u0161i\u010d\u2019s closing arguments pivot around a zero-sum binary opposition of the \u201cnarcissistic animal\u201d of capitalism versus the \u201calienated animal\u201d of \u201crevolutionary politics\u201d (including a certain Lacanianism). The latter\u2019s emphasis on \u201cextimate\u201d social mediation \u201cin the subject more than the subject itself\u201d(to resort fittingly to some Lacanese) is said to allow for \u201ca non-narcissistic love and consequently\u2026 a social link that is not rooted in self-love.\u201d By implication, capitalism actually, factually is materially grounded in a social link rooted in self-love. But, this is precisely where there are some serious problems, especially given Tom\u0161i\u010d\u2019s dual allegiances to both Marx and Lacan. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>By Marx\u2019s and Lacan\u2019s lights alike, Tom\u0161i\u010d mistakes capitalism\u2019s representations of itself for its true real(ity). As Marx warns while delineating the fundaments of historical materialism in the (in)famous preface to 1859\u2019s <em>A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy<\/em>, \u201cJust as one does not judge an individual by what he thinks about himself, so one cannot judge\u2026 a period\u2026 by its consciousness.\u201d Therefore, as a Marxian historical materialist, one cannot judge capitalism by its own ideas about itself. Similarly, psychoanalysis conveys no lesson if not that one cannot trustingly take for granted as accurate the self-awarenesses and self-depictions of both psyches and societies.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Of course, liberal and neo-liberal ideologies explicitly assert and rely upon images of capitalism as the social arrangement best suited to accommodate peacefully and sublimate productively an incorrigible human selfishness. In Marx\u2019s view, capitalism is split from within by a dialectical-structural discrepancy between (to borrow some Hegelian language) what it is for itself (<em>f\u00fcr sich<\/em>) and what it is in itself (<em>an sich<\/em>). For itself, at the superstructural level of the ideological, capitalism seems to be inseparable from selfishness, narcissism, self-love, self-interest, and so on. But, at the infrastructural level of the economic, capitalism really is, in itself, a potent accelerator of the socialization of production, a set of material processes transforming means and relations of production such as to bring about a historically unprecedented extension and intensification of social co-dependence between more and more people and populations. Capitalism does not become synonymous with \u201cglobalization\u201d for nothing.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>For both Hegel and Marx, when there is a discrepancy between the <em>f\u00fcr sich<\/em> and the<em> an sich<\/em>, the truth resides on the side of the latter. As is well known, one of the principle contradictions at the core of capitalism, in Marx\u2019s eyes, is its constitutive juxtaposition of, on the one hand, private property and everything entangled with it politically, legally, and ideologically (i.e., superstructurally) and, on the other hand, a thoroughly socialized mode of production as its real underlying infrastructural base. So, Marx, as already seen here, and Lacan, as will be seen below, both object to liberalist and individualist ideologies that capitalism\u2019s conception of itself as serving private persons\u2019 egocentrism (i.e., Tom\u0161i\u010d\u2019s \u201cnarcissism\u201d) is a misconception, a paradigmatic case of ideological self-consciousness (or <em>r\u00e9connaissance de soi<\/em>) as<em> m\u00e9connaissance<\/em> (to employ another key term from the Lacanian lexicon).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Although the antagonism Tom\u0161i\u010d relies upon between the \u201cnarcissistic animal\u201d of capitalism versus the \u201calienated animal\u201d of \u201crevolutionary politics\u201d has some validity at the level of competing ideologies, of clashing superstructural appearances, it is inaccurate and misleading apropos infrastructural being(s) within the capitalist mode of production. <strong>When he says of Marxian and Lacanian subjectivities that, \u201cthe subject of revolutionary politics is an alienated animal, which, in its most intimate interior, includes its other,\u201d this suggests that capitalism\u2019s egocentric subject, by contrast, does not harbor within itself any such extimacy (<em>qua<\/em> public\/social mediation within seemingly private\/individual immediacy)<\/strong>. But, one of the load-bearing theses of Marx\u2019s historical materialist critique of capitalist political economy is precisely that, however unconsciously,<strong> the subjects of capitalism are caught up and absorbed in a historical trajectory of socialization far exceeding the breadth and depth of such mediation in human history hitherto<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Now, what about Lacan\u2019s take on capitalism vis-\u00e0-vis selfishness?<\/strong> To begin with, narcissism, in light of the Lacanian accounts of both ego (<em>moi<\/em>) and subject (<em>sujet<\/em>), is vain according to both meanings of this adjective. That is to say, not only is narcissism synonymous with vanity \u2013 it also is vain in the sense of futile. For Lacan, the narcissist, corresponding to how Tom\u0161i\u010d uses the word \u201cnarcissism\u201d (as Freudian secondary narcissism), is stuck in a doomed endeavor to (over)valorize him\/her-self in and through the alterity of matrices of mediation consisting of words, images, etc. external to his\/her \u201cself.\u201d Succinctly stated, this vanity of narcissism is tantamount to the impossibility of transubstantiating otherness into<strong> otherlessness<\/strong>. It mistakes the outer for the inner.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, an authentically Lacanian assessment of capitalist selfishness cannot and would not limit itself to such broad brushstrokes of an ahistorical, metapsychological sort. This is especially true considering some of the highly astute glosses on Marx offered by Lacan himself. Indeed, as I will show in what follows, Lacan interfaces Marx\u2019s historical materialist analyses of political economies with his own psychoanalytic account of libidinal economies in ways that further elucidate what I have counter-intuitively described as the <strong>selflessness of capitalism.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the context of<em> le S\u00e9minaire<\/em>, some of Lacan\u2019s earliest references to Marx surface in the fifth and sixth seminars. These hint at a structural resemblance between the ego\u2019s self-thwarting (secondary) narcissism and the dynamics of capitalist economics. In <em>Seminar V<\/em>, he claims, somewhat enigmatically, that Marx\u2019s conception of exchange-value anticipates aspects of his own mirror stage. Then, in <em>Seminar VI<\/em>, he maintains, citing Marx\u2019s critique of Proudhon in 1847\u2019s<em> The Poverty of Philosophy<\/em>, that exchange-valorizing an object is equivalent to devalorizing it. Taking these two 1950s Marx references together, it seems that <strong>Lacan is suggesting an isomorphism between his theory of the ego and Marx\u2019s theory of value<\/strong>. The Lacanian ego attempts to valorize itself, to validate its narcissistic \u201cselfness,\u201d via a detour through mirroring others (and Others). This detour invariably ends up compromising and diluting the (false) self of the ego with alterity, with foreign (i.e., not-self) mediation. Likewise, Marxian use-value, on Lacan\u2019s reading, enters the economy\u2019s networks seeking to be represented as exchange-value, only to find that exchange-values have no correspondence with use-values from the perspective of the latter. For instance, commodities of the greatest utility rarely command notably high prices in the marketplace, while those that are unusually expensive quite often possess little to no practical-material utility.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacan\u2019s analytic interventions of the 1960s and early 1970s with respect to Marx\u2019s theory of value are what is most indispensable for my present purposes. Therein, Lacan develops a hybrid of political and libidinal economics capturing the self-subverting narcissism and ultimate <strong>selflessness of capitalism<\/strong>. This will be the focus of my remaining remarks in this contribution.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Admittedly, Lacan is cautious and even ambivalent in his approaches to Marx. He is careful to acknowledge that Marxian historical materialism and Freudian psychoanalysis both deal with specific structures and phenomena distinct from and irreducible to each other. Nevertheless, Lacan\u2019s assessment of the Marx-Freud pair clearly counts them as sharing a sizable amount in common: In their wakes, neither thinker can be avoided or surpassed by the intellectually honest; Neither thinker \u201cbullshits\u201d (d\u00e9conner), intended as the highest of praise by Lacan; Marx, along with Freud, helps define modernity through contributing to a rigorous conceptualization of the unconscious; And, both Marxism and psychoanalysis, by Lacan\u2019s reckoning, equally depend on what (post-)Saussurian structuralism comes to delineate in the guise of a general theory of the signifier (Lacan highlights Marx\u2019s account of commodity fetishism in particular as depending on \u201cthe logic of the signifier,\u201d with currency as the signifying stuff of this fetishism. Additionally, and as I have underscored here as well as elaborated upon elsewhere, Lacan goes so far as, from time to time, to self-identify as a Marxian materialist of a certain sort.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\">plus-de-jouir<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>But, before examining the cross-resonances Lacan establishes between Marx\u2019s surplus value and his surplus-jouissance, what about the <span style=\"color:#a30009\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong>rendering of plus-de-jouir as \u201cno more enjoying?\u201d <\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Several of Lacan\u2019s descriptions of surplus-jouissance reveal that \u201cplus-de-jouir\u201d is another name for Lacanian <strong><span style=\"color:#a3000d\" class=\"has-inline-color\">d\u00e9sir<\/span><\/strong>. Desire as <span style=\"color:#a3000d\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong>plus-de-jouir<\/strong> <\/span>is what remains of <strong><span style=\"color:#a30012\" class=\"has-inline-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong> once and insofar as the latter is mediated by the signifiers of a socio-linguistic big Other.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Specifically as regards castration <em>qua <\/em>the symbolic order\u2019s incisions into the singular parl\u00eatre (speaking being), the pivotal 1960 <strong>\u00e9crit<\/strong> \u201cThe Subversion of the Subject and the Dialectic of Desire in the Freudian Unconscious\u201d famously asserts near its close that, <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cCastration means that jouissance has to be refused in order to be attained on the inverse scale of the Law of desire\u201d (<em>La castration veut dire qu\u2019il faut que la jouissance soit refus\u00e9e, pour qu\u2019elle puisse \u00eatre atteinte sur l\u2019\u00e9chelle renvers\u00e9e de la Loi du d\u00e9sir<\/em>).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\">enjoyment-beyond-the-Law<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>Desire is generated in and through the  laws of socio-symbolic mediation. This mediation also generates, along with <span style=\"color:#a3000d\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong>d\u00e9sir<\/strong><\/span> as bound and constrained by the structures of Others, the compelling phantasm of an <span style=\"color:#0001a3\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong>enjoyment-beyond-the-Law<\/strong><\/span>, of a <span style=\"color:#a30009\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong>non-castrated jouissance<\/strong><\/span> as pure, undiluted, limitless, and absolute.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The incarnations and representations of this impossible fully to obtain (but also impossible ever to exorcise)<strong> <span style=\"color:#a30012\" class=\"has-inline-color\">spectral jouissance<\/span><\/strong> are manifestations of the Lacanian <span style=\"color:#2f00a3\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong>objet petit a. <\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Hence,<strong><span style=\"color:#a3000d\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> plus-de-jouir<\/span><\/strong> is the infinitely receding residue of supposedly lost <strong><span style=\"color:#a30012\" class=\"has-inline-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong> connected with each and every instance of<strong><span style=\"color:#1500a3\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> object a<\/span><\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong><span style=\"color:#a30016\" class=\"has-inline-color\">Plus-de-jouir<\/span><\/strong> is the donkey\u2019s carrot, the dragon forever chased but never caught\u2014thus, plus-de-jouir as \u201cno more enjoying\u201d (or as \u201cmanque-\u00e0-jouir\u201d [lack of enjoying], as Lacan puts it in 1970\u2019s \u201cRadiophonie\u201d). Various of Lacan\u2019s pronouncements regarding<span style=\"color:#a30016\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong> surplus-jouissance<\/strong><\/span> substantiate the highly condensed summary I provide in this paragraph (what is more, my<br>2005 book <em>Time Driven: Metapsychology and the Splitting of the Drive<\/em> covers much of this ground).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\">plus-de-jouir and surplus value<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacan\u2019s <strong><span style=\"color:#a3001b\" class=\"has-inline-color\">plus-de-jouir (<\/span><\/strong>or, as he translates it into German, <em>Mehrlust<\/em>) is avowedly modeled on Marx\u2019s <strong>surplus-value<\/strong> (Mehrwert). The latter is specifically<strong><span style=\"color:#1900a3\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> capitalist surplus-jouissance<\/span><\/strong> as orbiting around <strong><span style=\"color:#0006a3\" class=\"has-inline-color\">objet petit a<\/span><\/strong> in the socio-historical guise of commodities (as use-values bearing exchange-values that themselves in turn bear surplus-values). Lacan relabels Marx\u2019s<em> Mehrwert<\/em> as <em>Marxlust<\/em> <em>qua<\/em> Marxian <strong><span style=\"color:#a30023\" class=\"has-inline-color\">plus-de-jouir<\/span><\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The insatiable drives of capitalists and capital-prodded consumers are the embodiments of a <strong><span style=\"color:#a30009\" class=\"has-inline-color\">plus-de-jouir<\/span><\/strong> secreted by capitalism as a determinate mode of production.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The commodity fetishisms of both abstract-<em>qua<\/em>-quantitative hedonism (i.e., the capitalist\u2019s greed) and concrete-<em>qua<\/em>-qualitative hedonism (i.e., the consumer\u2019s mania for possessions) both<strong> vainly chase after<\/strong>, <em>ad infinitum<\/em> and <em>ad nauseam<\/em>, schematizations of the metapsychological category of <span style=\"color:#0700a3\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong>object a <\/strong><\/span>(with the <strong><span style=\"color:#a30004\" class=\"has-inline-color\">surplus-jouissance<\/span><\/strong> embodied in <em><strong>a<\/strong><\/em> incessantly slipping away, metonymically sliding off ).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Likewise, on one occasion, he portrays <strong><span style=\"color:#210af0\" class=\"has-inline-color\">objet petit a<\/span><\/strong><span style=\"color:#02506a\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> <\/span>as the point of overlap\/<br>convergence between Marx\u2019s <strong>surplus-value<\/strong> and <span style=\"color:#a30012\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong>surplus-jouissance<\/strong><\/span>.  The more (plus) commodities capitalism manufactures, the more discontent (<em>Unbehagen<\/em>, <em>malaise<\/em>, unenjoyable<em> jouir<\/em>) it produces in its various (class) subjects.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In Seminar XVII, Lacan identifies commodities and associated consumerist spectacles as \u201cimitation surplus jouissance\u201d (<em>plus-de-jouir en toc<\/em>), with capitalist \u201ccrowds\u201d (beaucoup de monde) continually swarming around whatever is advertised as the latest shiny \u201csemblance\u201d (<em>semblant<\/em>) of <em><span style=\"color:#a30004\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong>plus-de-jouir<\/strong><\/span><\/em>. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Capitalism, as illuminated by the Marxist critique of political economy, reveals itself to be organized around individual and collective flights toward mirages of never-to-be-attained infinite (and inexistent) enjoyments. <em><strong><span style=\"color:#a30009\" class=\"has-inline-color\">Plus-de-jouir<\/span><\/strong><\/em> is a bottomless pit unable to be filled with any amount of profits or products.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacan\u2019s sixteenth and seventeenth seminars contain what arguably are his most detailed and significant engagements with Marx. I will return to <em>Seminar XVII<\/em> in a moment. In <em>Seminar XVI<\/em>, Lacan playfully Oedipalizes Marx\u2019s <em>Mehrwer<\/em>t (<strong>surplus-value<\/strong>) by associating it with the homophonous <em>m\u00e8re verte<\/em> (green mother). One indeed fairly could portray <strong>surplus-value<\/strong> as the mother of capitalism. Capitalism\u2019s very <em>raison d\u2019\u00eatre <\/em>is the augmentation of <em>Mehrwert<\/em> in perpetuity.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I take the greenness of this <em>m\u00e8re <\/em>to signal envy. The circuit M-C-M\u2032, as movement of capital in pursuit of<strong> surplus-value<\/strong>, is envious in its extraction of everything else from everyone else. That is to say,<em> <strong>Mehrwert<\/strong><\/em><strong> <\/strong>endlessly demands of others that they sacrifice themselves and their belongings to it, to its boundless self-valorization. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Additionally, many might assume that Lacan implicitly conflates<em> la m\u00e8re verte<\/em> with the figure of the capitalist\u2014with the corresponding figure of the proletarian as the addressee of this envious mother\u2019s commands. This assumption would align with a cartoon version of Marxism pitting selfish capitalists against victimized proletarians. However, as a not imperceptive reader of Marx, Lacan does not conflate the capitalist, as bearer or personification of capitalism\u2019s <strong>greed-as-drive<\/strong>, with the green mother. The de-psychologized, structural envy of <strong>surplus-value<\/strong> (<em>Mehrwert<\/em>) relentlessly extorts sacrifices out of capitalists too as its fungible, disposable bearers\/personifications. Although <em>la m\u00e8re verte<\/em> gives birth to capitalists, she is all too ready to cast them aside or utterly destroy them if they fail to live up to her greedy imperatives. She is an inhuman monster.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Several key moments a year later, in<em> Seminar XVII<\/em>, corroborate my immediately preceding assertion that Lacan sees capitalists too as amongst the green mother\u2019s countless potential and actual victims. The first of these moments occurs in the session of November 26, 1969:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u2026in Marx the<strong> a<\/strong>\u2026 is recognized as functioning at the level that is articulated\u2014on the basis of analytic discourse, not any of the others\u2014as<strong><span style=\"color:#a30012\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> surplus jouissance <\/span><\/strong>(<em>plus-de- jouir<\/em>). Here you have what Marx discovered as what actually happens at the level of<strong> surplus value<\/strong> (plus-value).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>After this linkage of Marxian plus-value with psychoanalytic plus-de-jouir and its objet petit a, Lacan continues:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Of course, it wasn\u2019t Marx who invented <strong>surplus value<\/strong>. It\u2019s just that prior to him nobody knew what its place was. It has the same ambiguous place as the one I have just mentioned, that of excess work (<em>travail en trop<\/em>), of surplus work (<em>plus-de-travail<\/em>). \u2018What does it pay in?\u2019 he says. \u2018It pays in<strong><span style=\"color:#a3001b\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> jouissance<\/span><\/strong>, precisely, and this has to go somewhere.\u2019<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacan might have the Althusser of 1965\u2019s <em>Lire le Capital<\/em> in mind in the first two sentences here. He perhaps is thinking specifically of Althusser\u2019s contention that Marx, in forging the theory of surplus-value, did not invent this <em>ex nihilo<\/em>, but, rather, explicitly and systematically posited the implicit and unsystematic presuppositions of such economic predecessors as the Physiocrats, Smith, and Ricardo (economists who blindly bumped up against<strong> surplus-value<\/strong> without, in Lacan\u2019s words, \u201cknowing what its place was\u201d). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>That noted, Lacan\u2019s equation of <strong>plus-value <\/strong>with<strong> plus-de-travail<\/strong> is perfectly, orthodoxly Marxist. Marx himself defines <strong>surplus-value <\/strong>as the value produced by the worker in excess of what the capitalist pays in terms of the worker\u2019s wages\u2014an excess arising from surplus laboring time over and above the laboring time necessary for producing value equivalent to the worker\u2019s means of subsistence (reflected in wages). Every working day without exception under capitalism contains unpaid overtime, whether this is acknowledged or not.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But, what about Lacan\u2019s linkage of surplus work with<strong><span style=\"color:#a3000d\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> jouissance <\/span><\/strong>in the second half of the block quotation above? Although the worker is paid a wage, he\/she pays the capitalist back in value exceeding this wage. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Despite ideological misrepresentations of labor contracts as fair-and-square deals for the workers \u201cfreely\u201d accepting to enter into them\u2014of course, Marx fiercely debunks these insidious, pervasive, and persistent capitalist myths\u2014capitalism is predicated upon the structural injustice of unequal exchange between the bourgeois and the proletarian. Each working day is divided between \u201cnecessary labor\u201d (as producing exchange-value equal to the entire day\u2019s wages paid by the capitalist to the worker) and \u201csurplus labor\u201d (as uncompensated labor producing <strong>surplus-value<\/strong> accruing to the capitalist at the expense of the worker). In short, <strong>surplus labor = unpaid labor = surplus-value<\/strong> (<strong><span style=\"color:#a3000d\" class=\"has-inline-color\">= surplus-jouissance<\/span><\/strong>, Lacan adds).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacan\u2019s psychoanalytic supplement to Marx\u2019s meticulous accounts of all this is that the worker \u201c<strong><span style=\"color:#a30016\" class=\"has-inline-color\">pays in jouissance<\/span><\/strong>\u201d in exchange for wages that never compensate this loss. There is a libidinal as well as financial imbalance in this socio-economic relationship between bourgeois and proletarian. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Presumably, the \u201csomewhere\u201d to which the worker\u2019s<strong><span style=\"color:#a3001b\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> jouissance<\/span><\/strong> goes, to where it is paid, is the capitalist and his\/her (deep) pockets. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As regards this destination of <strong><span style=\"color:#a30023\" class=\"has-inline-color\">legally stolen jouissance<\/span><\/strong>, the worker may well consciously or unconsciously fantasize about something along the lines of an envious parental figure relishing ill-gotten gains with a sadistic smirk. On the heels of the prior quoted passages from the session of November 26, 1969, Lacan injects a further twist. He states:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What\u2019s disturbing is that if one pays in<strong><span style=\"color:#a3000d\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> jouissance<\/span><\/strong>, then one has got it, and then, once one has got it it is very urgent that one squander it. If one does not squander it, there will be all sorts of consequences.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Jouissance as hot potato<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p><span style=\"color:#a30004\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong>Jouissance<\/strong><\/span> is akin to the proverbial hot potato. As soon as it lands in one\u2019s hands, one must quickly toss it to someone else. If one holds onto it for any length, one suffers the painful \u201cconsequence\u201d of getting burned (with <strong><span style=\"color:#a3001b\" class=\"has-inline-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong>, if ever attained, proving to be traumatically intense or crushingly anti-climactic). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This supposed<strong><span style=\"color:#a30016\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> enjoyment<\/span><\/strong> (in)exists in a state of constant circulation, always being passed on to others (and forever being imagined as really enjoyed only by these third parties). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Perhaps Lacan is hinting that workers might be, at least in part, libidinally complicit in their exploitation by capital, repeatedly \u201c<strong>squandering\u201d the excess\/surplus of their lives in payment to capitalists as a means of avoiding what otherwise would be unbearably too much and\/or miserably not enough<\/strong>. To paraphrase one of Lacan\u2019s glosses on the Oedipus complex, if the exploitation of labor were not a fact, it would have to be invented.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But, what about the capitalists themselves? What do they do when these payments of jouissance land in their laps and start oozing into the lining of their pockets?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Later in <em>Seminar XVII<\/em>, during its March 11, 1970 session, Lacan begins to answer these questions about capitalists. In doing so, he believes himself to be correcting Marx in certain respects: <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What is masked at the level of Marx is that the master to whom this surplus<br><strong><span style=\"color:#a3001b\" class=\"has-inline-color\">jouissance <\/span><\/strong>is owed has renounced everything, and <strong><span style=\"color:#a30016\" class=\"has-inline-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong> first up, because he has exposed himself to death, and because he remains firmly fastened to this position whose Hegelian articulation is clear.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the theory of the four discourses developed in the seventeenth seminar and the contemporaneous intervention \u201c<em>Radiophonie<\/em>,\u201d<strong> Lacan treats the capitalist as a variant of the figure of the master (<em>ma\u00eetre<\/em>), with \u201cthe discourse of the master\u201d<\/strong> being one of the four discourses (along with those of university, hysteric, and analyst). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>He elsewhere reiterates this subsumption of capitalism under a more general template of mastery. 200 Through <strong>this identification of capitalist with master<\/strong>, Lacan then, as he does in the passage just quoted, <strong>casts this bourgeois power in the role of the lord as per Hegel\u2019s dialectic of \u201cLordship and Bondage\u201d i<\/strong>n the 1807 <em>Phenomenology of Spirit <\/em>(i.e., Hegel\u2019s master-slave dialectic, itself the veritable obsession of Lacan\u2019s own <em>ma\u00eetre<\/em> in matters Hegelian, namely, Alexandre Koj\u00e8ve).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To condense a very well-known story, Hegel\u2019s lord wins what ends up being a Pyrrhic victory. His apparent triumph turns into, converges or coincides with, his actual defeat.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The position of (seeming) mastery is supposed to confirm both the master\u2019s transcendence of animality (via defiance of death) and his authority over others (represented by the slave).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Instead, this position proves to be self-subverting, resulting in a regression back into what Aristotle would call the pleasures of a barnyard animal furnished by servants upon whom the lord becomes abjectly dependent. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And, of course, these denigrated bondsmen, in their denigration, are unable to confer authority-sustaining recognition (<em>Anerkennung<\/em>) upon the lord, since being recognized by a dehumanized slave counts for nothing. Moreover, as he-who-does-not-work, the Hegelian master unwittingly deprives himself of the only real <em>praxis<\/em> in and through which subjective agents leave lasting traces of themselves within the worked and reworked world. In exchange for risking everything in the initial struggle for dominance, the victor, through his very victory, loses everything. <strong>The sacrifice through which he becomes master proves to be self-sacrifice.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the prior quotation from Seminar XVII, Lacan not only alleges that the capitalist, like the Hegelian master, is (however knowingly or not) self-sacrificial\u2014he charges Marx with having failed to learn this lesson from Hegel (with Marx\u2019s writings, starting in the early 1840s, exhibiting his familiarity with the Phenomenology of Spirit). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But, I would maintain that this is a rare instance in which Lacan uncharacteristically proves to be a less than stringently rigorous and attentive reader. In fact, <strong>Lacan here repeats Weber\u2019s mistake of failing to credit Marx with already having alighted upon and done justice to the <span style=\"color:#1000a3\" class=\"has-inline-color\">selflessness of capitalism<\/span>.<\/strong> As I have shown throughout much of the preceding, Marx\u2019s texts reveal him to be acutely conscious of and intellectually responsive to the <strong>renunciative character of capitalism<\/strong> for capitalists themselves.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Still in the seventeenth seminar\u2019s session of March 11, 1970, promptly after the previous quotation above, Lacan embellishes further upon his misdirected criticism of Marx. He proceeds:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The master in all this makes a small effort to make everything work, in other words, he gives an order. Simply by fulfilling his function as master he loses something. It\u2019s at least through this something lost that something of <strong><span style=\"color:#a30012\" class=\"has-inline-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong> has to be rendered to him\u2014specifically, <strong><span style=\"color:#a3000d\" class=\"has-inline-color\">surplus jouissance<\/span><\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacan continues:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If, by means of this relentlessness (<em>acharnement<\/em>) to castrate himself that he had, he hadn\u2019t computed this <span style=\"color:#a3000d\" class=\"has-inline-color\">surplus jouissance <\/span>(<em>comptabilis\u00e9 ce plus-de-jouir<\/em>), if he hadn\u2019t converted it into<strong> surplus value<\/strong> (<em>fait la plus-value<\/em>), in other words if he hadn\u2019t founded capitalism, Marx would have realized that <strong>surplus value<\/strong> is <span style=\"color:#a3001b\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong>surplus jouissance<\/strong><\/span>. None of this, of course, prevents it being the case that capitalism is founded by him, and that the function of<strong> surplus value <\/strong>is designated with complete pertinence in its devastating consequences.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>When Lacan claims that, \u201cSimply by fulfilling his function as master he loses something,\u201d he likely is relying upon his account of specifically <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong>symbolic castration<\/strong><\/span>. The very signifiers of mastery (i.e., S1s as insignias, marks, traits, etc.) are prostheses external to the speaking subject (masquerading) as master. These prostheses always remain irreducible to, not fully identical with, the subjectivity attaching itself to them. A gap stubbornly persists between subject-as-$ and S1-as-signifier.<strong> <\/strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong>This gap is the cut of symbolic castration.<\/strong> <\/span>Hence, just as the Hegelian master is defeated in and through his very moment of (seeming) triumph, so too is the Lacanian <em>ma\u00eetre<\/em> (symbolically) castrated in and through the very process of being crowned with the emblems of potency-as-non-castration. The signifiers of power simultaneously signify impotence. Put in Lacanian terms,<strong> the phallus is the signifier of castration<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Likewise, the Marxian master-as-bourgeois \u201ccastrates himself\u201d in and through assuming the very role of capitalist as the ostensible potentate [autocratic ruler RT.] of capitalism, namely, capitalism\u2019s <span style=\"color:#a30009\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong>subject supposed-to-enjoy. <\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacan almost certainly is well aware of Marx\u2019s renditions of the individual capitalist as a mere bearer (<em>Tr\u00e4ger<\/em>) or personification (<em>Personifikation<\/em>) of capital. As seen, depsychologized greed as the circuit M-C-M\u2032, the logic of capital itself, is a drive (<em>Trieb, pulsion<\/em>) in the capitalist more than the capitalist him\/her-self. Abstract-<em>qua<\/em>-quantitative hedonism is a socio-structural thrust capable of overriding (Lacan might say \u201coverwriting\u201d) what would otherwise be the volitions and actions of the person bearing\/personifying capital and its drive.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>As seen, depsychologized greed as the circuit M-C-M\u2032, the logic of capital itself, is a drive (<em>Trieb, pulsion<\/em>) in the capitalist more than the capitalist him\/her-self.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>This drivenness is, as Lacan indicates in <em>Seminar XXII<\/em>, the <em>p\u00e8re-version<\/em>, the perversion of the father, for the paternal figure of the capitalist-as-master (in addition to his\/her structurally dictated sadism and psychopathy, there is also, for Marx as well as Weber, his\/her miserliness and masochism). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Therefore, insofar as the \u201csymbolic\u201d in Lacan\u2019s \u201csymbolic castration\u201d also<br>refers to the symbolic order as a set of social structures akin to Hegel\u2019s objective spirit and\/or Marx\u2019s infrastructure-superstructure arrangement, <strong>Marx\u2019s capitalist<\/strong>, seen from a Lacanian perspective, indeed should count as <strong>symbolically castrated<\/strong>. Whether Lacan himself, as a somewhat shameless French bourgeois<em> bon vivant<\/em>, intends for his audience to shed tears on<br>behalf of the poor, castrated capitalists is difficult to tell.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the second of the two preceding quotations from the seventeenth seminar, Lacan asserts psychoanalytic metapsychology\u2019s explanatory priority <em>vis-\u00e0-vis <\/em>historical materialism. For him, Marx\u2019s<strong> surplus-value<\/strong> is a species of the genus <strong><span style=\"color:#a30016\" class=\"has-inline-color\">surplus-jouissance<\/span><\/strong>, with the former being a historically peculiar instantiation of the latter. He evidently assumes that Marx (and Marxists) would have to take this as a critical correction. Lacan maintains that Marx\u2019s focus on capitalism specific <strong>surplus-value<\/strong> (i.e., the species) blinds him to the trans-historical category of<strong><span style=\"color:#a30016\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> (surplus-)jouissance<\/span><\/strong> (i.e., the genus). Marx purportedly cannot see the forest of <strong><span style=\"color:#a30016\" class=\"has-inline-color\">plus-de-jouir<\/span><\/strong> for the tree of<em> Mehrwert<\/em> (\u201cif he hadn\u2019t converted it into surplus value (<em>fait la plus-value<\/em>), in other words if he hadn\u2019t founded capitalism, Marx would have realized that <strong>surplus value is<\/strong> <strong><span style=\"color:#a3001b\" class=\"has-inline-color\">surplus jouissance<\/span><\/strong>\u201d)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>Marx\u2019s<strong> surplus-value<\/strong> is a species of the genus <strong>surplus-jouissance<\/strong>, with the former being a historically peculiar instantiation of the latter<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>As my earlier unpacking and reconstruction of Marx\u2019s drive theory indicates, Marx actually is sensitive to such genus-species distinctions. He refers, as seen, to \u201ca particular form of the drive\u201d (<em>eine besondre Form des Triebs<\/em>), thereby signaling a difference between drive (as such) and its specific instantiations. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Hence, it is unclear whether Marx would object, as Lacan presumes he would, to Lacan\u2019s analytic insistence on distinguishing between, on the one hand, the <strong>socially non-specific categories of libidinal economics (here<\/strong>,<strong><span style=\"color:#a3001b\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> surplus-jouissance<\/span><\/strong>) and, on the other hand, the socially specific manifestations of these categories as mediated by political economics (here, <strong>surplus-value<\/strong>). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Near the start of this intervention, I argued that Marx is not the unreserved, reductive historicizer many view him as being (including Lacan in this context).With Marx\u2019s Homer problem and drive theory (with the latter as part of a general philosophical anthropology underpinning historical materialism), he is not automatically averse to the sorts of amendments suggested by Lacan\u2019s remarks in the seventeenth seminar.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The second quotation above from Seminar XVII also refers to the notion of \u201c<span style=\"color:#a30012\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong>computing surplus jouissance<\/strong><\/span>\u201d (<em>comptabiliser plus-de-jouir<\/em>). This leads into the last of the moments of concern to me in the seventeenth seminar, a moment likewise featuring this idea of comptabiliser (<em>comme compter<\/em>). Near the end of the session of June 10, 1970, Lacan observes:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Something changed in the master\u2019s discourse at a certain point in history. We are not going to break our backs finding out if it was because of Luther, or Calvin, or some unknown traffic of ships around Genoa, or in the Mediterranean Sea, or anywhere else, for the important point is that on a certain day <strong><span style=\"color:#a30023\" class=\"has-inline-color\">surplus jouissance <\/span><\/strong>became calculable, could be counted, totalized (<em>le plus-de-jouir se compte, se comptabilise, se totalise<\/em>). This is where what is called the accumulation of capital begins.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacan\u2019s wording indicates his de-emphasizing of the historicist sensibilities of three related theoretical perspectives: Hegel\u2019s (Luther), Weber\u2019s (Calvin), and that of Marxian historical materialism (\u201csome unknown traffic of ships\u201d). Consistent with his maintenance <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>of a level distinction between the dimensions covered by analytic metapsychology and historical materialism, Lacan pinpoints the transition from socio-economic pre-modernity to modernity proper (\u201cSomething changed in the master\u2019s discourse at a certain point in history\u201d) at the tipping point of the phase transition wherein trans-historical <strong><span style=\"color:#a30012\" class=\"has-inline-color\">surplus-jouissance<\/span><\/strong> <strong>historically becomes mathematized, mediated by quantification, thereby becoming surplus-value<\/strong> (\u201cthe important point is that on a certain day surplus jouissance became calculable, could be counted, totalized (<em>le plus-de-jouir se compte, se comptabilise, se totalise<\/em>). This is where what is called the accumulation accumulation of capital begins\u201d). Already in <em>Seminar XIII<\/em>, <strong>Lacan recognizes that the historical emergence of capitalism induces a fundamental mutation in<\/strong> <span style=\"color:#a3001f\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong>jouissance<\/strong><\/span>. And, with this, my own analytic labors here come full circle: This is Lacan\u2019s version of \u201cfrom closed need to infinite greed.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p><strong>Lacan recognizes that the historical emergence of capitalism induces a fundamental mutation in<\/strong> <strong>jouissance<\/strong>.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Before concluding, I should note that Lacan\u2019s decision to speak of totalization\u201d in the above quotation is strange and questionable. He proposes that rendering <strong><span style=\"color:#a30012\" class=\"has-inline-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong> computable\/calculable\/countable also renders it totalizable. I assume he means \u201ctotalization\u201d as synonymous with the accumulation designated in the phrase \u201cthe accumulation of capital.\u201d But, Marx himself as well as Lacan elsewhere both indicate that the capitalist mathematization of all things (including the seemingly most intimate) <strong>infinitizes<\/strong> and, hence, de-totalizes<strong><span style=\"color:#a30012\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> jouissance<\/span><\/strong>, drives, and the like. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>From the Marxist standpoint I have been elaborating throughout my contribution, it is crucial to appreciate that the libidinal unboundedness opened up by quantitative infinitization liquidates any actual or potential totality as final end or limit. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It now can be anticipated, with the combined lights of Marx and Lacan, that if one ends up at the very top of the Forbes billionaires list\u2014God forbid\u2014one will hurl one\u2019s enormous mass of accumulated<strong><span style=\"color:#a30004\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> surplus-value\/jouissance <\/span><\/strong>into philanthropic endeavors. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>One thereby not only evades getting burned by <strong><span style=\"color:#a30016\" class=\"has-inline-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong> attained, but, in the process, launders one\u2019s past misdeeds, airbrushes one\u2019s legacy. Nobody dares be caught dead wallowing in<em><span style=\"color:#a30012\" class=\"has-inline-color\"><strong> plus-de-jouir.<\/strong><\/span><\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Following the Lacan of \u201c<em>Radiophonie<\/em>,\u201d one even can say that capitalism forecloses <strong>surplus-value<\/strong> by turning it into an infinite void, a never-ending hole, <strong>everyone, capitalists included, strains to avoid at all costs<\/strong>. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>No sooner does the bourgeois (re-)obtain it than he\/she \u201csquanders\u201d it again. The capitalist repeatedly sends <strong>surplus-value<\/strong>, and the<strong><span style=\"color:#a30012\" class=\"has-inline-color\"> surplus-jouissance<\/span><\/strong> <strong>clinging to it, back into circulation via reinvestment, decadence, philanthropy, and\/or buying politicians.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As it turns out, capitalism is not good at satisfying selfishness, its supposed primary strength much touted by its defenders and apologists. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Agreeing that it at least provides substantial private satisfactions is still to grant it too much credit. Even on the terms capitalism sets for itself, it is wretchedly bankrupt\u2014and this also for Smith\u2019s imagined lucky few apart from his admitted unfortunate majority. In actuality, nobody gets truly to enjoy capitalism.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Johnston, A. (2017). From Closed Need to Infinite Greed: Marx\u2019s Drive Theory. Continental Thought and Theory, 1(4), 270-346. The capitalist drive for self-valorization is an unsatisfiable demand, to which no labour can live up to.&#8221; Johnston quoting Tom\u0161i\u010d. Johnston like much of what Tom\u0161i\u010d says. However he finds that Tom\u0161i\u010d is not sufficiently sensitive to &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/2021\/06\/22\/johnston-on-tomsic\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Johnston on Tom\u0161i\u010d&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[111,65,125,21,24,144],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-15023","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-desire","category-dia-mat","category-drive","category-jouissance","category-lacan","category-marx"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/15023","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=15023"}],"version-history":[{"count":29,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/15023\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":15052,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/15023\/revisions\/15052"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=15023"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=15023"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=15023"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}